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IQ. How do you get it?

The more I read, and the more I go and get involved with digital photography, the more I am sure that Image Quality is readily available to everyone cheaply and easily now, but the nuances, the very refined 'best of' for the pro's also requires the right kit.

These are just some random Sunday thoughts, but if someone starting out asked me what they needed to do to produce top flight images I'd say, in order...

Get a camera with AT LEAST an APC sized sensor. The Mp argument is less clear, but sensor size matters.

Learn to use the camera properly, right from the very basics up. So many pics are spoilt by people who don't understand their tools.

Buy good quality lenses. That is, make sure your glass will out resolve your sensor, or equal it.

Love your subject and find time for it, not only on site, but in the 'darkroom' later.

Learn post processing. At least get Lightroom or similar, but preferably get full photoshop and learn to use it.

Shoot Raw.

I'm talking here about aiming to exhibit your work in a gallery for example. I think there is a good arguement for saying bollox to most of the above and just taking snaps with a camera phone IF you are a goddam artistic genius.
I'm not, so the above would be my route.

yep, that makes sense to me - tho, I seldom do any post processing other that a touch of sharpening, adjust brightness (and sometimes saturation) and convert to jpeg...I strive to get the image I want in the camera itself...
sure there are limitations that way, but I can live with that...

I was at Yeovilton Air Day last weekend and the amount of guys I saw with top of the range DSLRs with those HUGE grey Canon sports/zoom lenses on, hand-held and camera waving and wobbling around.... surely a large factor in IQ is sharpness and the best way to ensure that is a tripod??

I was at Yeovilton Air Day last weekend and the amount of guys I saw with top of the range DSLRs with those HUGE grey Canon sports/zoom lenses on, hand-held and camera waving and wobbling around.... surely a large factor in IQ is sharpness and the best way to ensure that is a tripod??

A modern DSLR at a high ISO with a fast IS f2.8 or f4 lens will give high IQ images without a tripod as the shutter speed will quite high - providing the guys have the skills to hold them steady or pan steadily.

I was at Yeovilton Air Day last weekend and the amount of guys I saw with top of the range DSLRs with those HUGE grey Canon sports/zoom lenses on, hand-held and camera waving and wobbling around.... surely a large factor in IQ is sharpness and the best way to ensure that is a tripod??

I was at Duxford Flying Legends earlier today; one of those people holding a cream-coloured Canon lens (100-400mm in his case) was a mate of mine. I was using my Nikon 80-400. Neither of us used tripods, they're useless for flying aircraft unless you have a gimbal head and a lot of space around you.

As TK says, choosing the appropriate shutter speed is the most important factor; although, with aircraft, just tracking and having the autofocus keep-up is the biggest issue.

Heh, yeah, I managed to get a couple of OK shots with a hand-held compact, while carrying a four year old with the other arm who was a bit scared, most of em are just sky though!

A few people had tripods set up, and all the pros around the pitch at the euro final last night had monopods at the least. I was reading a photography book the other day and the author reckoned that IQ starts with sharpness and without a support you're going to compromise it. I thought as it was a book on photography the author might know what he's talking about, though hey it might be bollocks these days.

..... I was reading a photography book the other day and the author reckoned that IQ starts with sharpness and without a support you're going to compromise it. I thought as it was a book on photography the author might know what he's talking about, though hey it might be bollocks these days.

Not really, just that on some occasions a tripod or mono pod is more of a hinderance and modern day technology such as image stabilisation and clean high ISO means you are not as reliant on a steady platform as you used to be.

Having said that, sometimes a super sharp and detail image can take away from the visual/artistic merit of an image.

Heh, yeah, I managed to get a couple of OK shots with a hand-held compact, while carrying a four year old with the other arm who was a bit scared, most of em are just sky though!

A few people had tripods set up, and all the pros around the pitch at the euro final last night had monopods at the least. I was reading a photography book the other day and the author reckoned that IQ starts with sharpness and without a support you're going to compromise it. I thought as it was a book on photography the author might know what he's talking about, though hey it might be bollocks these days.

A large full-frame DSLR with sports lens will probably weigh 6kg or more; putting it on a tripod means you don't have to hold it for 90 minutes.

Buy a DSLR or a Leica as everything else is compromised. As an example my Fuiji x10 makes a great landscape camera, but as for moving subjects or repeatable and reliable focus wide open....forget it, maybe one day EVMs wll improve along with the shutters required, but not yet. Then get the best glass you can. Learn to get the shots right in camera and only ever go above LR3 if post processing is your artistic bag. Sh

Shoot loads, spend quality time doing it and never be embarassed about shooting...not easy that last one, but get over your own sensabilities as soon as you can.

As an aside, most decent digital cameras will get you 95% plus of the IQ of the best DSLRs and Leica for most of the presentaional and display methods that most people use...ie on line cropped JPEGs and A4 and below prints, 99% of viewers will not be able to tell the difference.

Get your ass out of the house.
Go to interesting places, where things are happening & shoot.
Sometimes a slightly "punk attitude" is needed, go to places, take loads of shots, dont worry too much.
And keep the camera with you, not at home in its bag/box*

*note to self, I should do this more.

I have the Olympic Torch relay coming through tomorrow, so i hope to god my shots are good.
And it dont rain on my new toy*

learn to control the medium so it's second nature, then go and make pictures, steer clear of photography forums and camera bores. look at art and film for inspiration.
works for me :-)

Does your negativity towards Photography Forums include those within a HIFI Forum ?

Photography Forums, just like those dedicated to other areas like cars, motorcycles, fishing, football and even HIFI have their fair share of twisty navel-gazing technophobes. However those same places are just as capable of providing helpful information, quality tips and inspiration to improve your subject knowledge and capabilities in your area of interest.

I agree becoming fully technically competent and au fait with your equipment is essential - art & film are a source of inspiration but Forums can also provide the incentive to develop and try something new and creative and shouldn't be ignored.